Subject Guide

Copyright Resources

Title 17 of the United States Code (the Copyright Act of 1976) is the primary basis of copyright law in the United States, as amended by several later enacted copyright provisions. The Act spells out the basic rights of copyright holders, codifies the doctrine of "fair use," and for most new copyrights adopts a term based on the date of the author's death. The complete text of the code is available from the U.S. Copyright office.

For works published in the United States, copyright generally lasts for 70 years after the death of the author. Peter Hirtle, of the Cornell University Library, maintains a useful chart for determining whether a work is in the public domain.

Here are some useful tips from the several intellectual property attorneys at Lewis Roca Rothgerber Christie LLP in Phoenix, Arizona.

The library has a number of ebooks on copyright. You may find these particularly helpful:

Copyright for Multimedia This course addresses copyright questions about different formats (data, images, music and video). Sometimes the law specifically distinguishes between these different formats, and in most cases there are media-specific considerations that impact a copyright analysis.

Under the auspices of Harvard Law School, the HarvardX distance-learning initiative, and the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, CopyrightX is a twelve-week networked course that has been offered annually from January to May since 2013. The course is led by William Fisher, WilmerHale Professor of Intellectual Property Law at Harvard Law School. He developed the pedagogy of the course, prepared the recorded lectures, and selected and edited the reading materials. CopyrightX explores the current law of copyright; the impact of that law on art, entertainment, and industry; and the ongoing debates concerning how the law should be reformed.

Leval, Pierre N. “Toward a Fair Use Standard”. Harvard Law Review 103.5 (1990): 1105–1136. (Pierre Leval is a United States Circuit Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. This article is recognized as an influential work of scholarship arguing that the transformativeness of a work, discussed in the first fair use factor, is the most critical element of the fair use analysis.)